Miho Fujii is a Japanese visual artist with a background in cultural and regional studies. Working with ink on traditional washi paper, she creates visual spaces shaped by bold, living lines and architectural rhythms.
Her work explores memory, spiritual presence, and the quiet force of life that remains in spaces often considered empty. Rather than portraying ruins with nostalgia, she constructs imagined sanctuaries—temples of presence—where silence breathes and vitality persists.
Her work is increasingly recognized both in Japan and abroad for its poetic strength and subtle emotional resonance.
In 2025, she was awarded the Superintendent of Education Prize at the Nara City Museum Exhibition in Japan. She is a member of the Osaka Prefecture Artists Association and the art group “Kawachi wo Egaku Kai” (Kawachi Art Society),both of which require a juried selection process.
An imagined structure breathes through time—
a quiet presence built with ink and memory.
Not a real building, but a trace of architecture,
vanishing, yet alive on washi paper.
“Echoes of a Vanishing Structure”
An imagined structure breathes through time—
a quiet presence built with ink and memory.
Not a real building, but a trace of architecture,
vanishing, yet alive on washi paper.